The stream was named after the
Iroquoian-speaking
Susquehannock people. In the eighteenth century, British colonists in
Pennsylvania called them the Conestoga, referring to the river, and to the village the Susquehannock established about 1690. The name may be based on the Mohawk word
tekanastoge, meaning "place of the upright pole." Conestoga may also be the anglicized form of
Gandastogue which is possibly the closest to what the Susquehannock called themselves. For several decades Conestoga Town was important fur trading center, and a meeting place for negotiations between Pennsylvania and various Indigenous groups. Its importance, however, waned as the focus of the fur trade moved westwards. The population declined due to out-migration, and the remaining Conestoga became increasing impoverished and dependent on the Pennsylvania government, who occasionally provided clothing and provisions. Robert Fulton’s early experiments to perfect the first commercial steamboat occurred on the Conestoga River. In the 19th century the name of the river gained wider recognition with the spread of the
Conestoga wagon, first built in and named after this valley. The wagon assisted the transportation of freight throughout the East, and later was adapted to help transport goods to the western frontier of the
United States. So many cigars were made in the watershed in the late 19th century that a local cigar named the Conestoga became known as a "
stogie" throughout the United States. In the early 19th century, it was possible to travel by boat to
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, from
Chesapeake Bay through a system of locks. Though the Conestoga is smaller than most streams generally designated a river, local
boosterism in the late 19th century insisted that any stream holding scheduled commercial transport should be called a river. Steamboat service to a local amusement park barely qualified, but the designation caught on. The name "Conestoga" has also been applied to the Conestoga Rocket, a rocket produced from
LGM-30 Minuteman parts and launched from
Matagorda Island, the freighter
Conestoga, which is a popular diving wreck in the
Thousand Islands, the
C-93 Conestoga cargo aircraft, and, in
Star Trek: Enterprise, the name of the starship used in the failed first attempt at deep space colonization. ==Watershed==